Las Vegas Review-Journal

17 die in Tropical Storm Nate; could hit Gulf Coast

- By Luis Manuel Galeano The Associated Press

MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Newly formed Tropical Storm Nate was blamed Thursday for at least 17 deaths across Central America as it dumped rain across the region on a path that would carry it toward a potential landfall on the U.S. Gulf Coast as a hurricane over the weekend. Louisiana officials ordered some people there to evacuate.

The U.S. National Hurricane

Center said the storm could cause dangerous flooding by dumping as much as 15 to 20 inches of rain on Nicaragua, with higher accumulati­ons in a few places.

It had maximum sustained winds of 40 mph at midday Thursday and was likely to strengthen over the northweste­rn Caribbean Sea Thursday night and Friday before a possible strike on the Cancun region at the tip of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula.

In Nicaragua, Nate’s arrival followed two weeks of near-constant rain that had left the ground saturated and rivers swollen. Authoritie­s placed the whole country on alert and warned of flooding and landslides.

Nicaragua’s vice president and spokeswoma­n, Rosario Murillo, said that at least 15 people had died in that country due to the storm. She didn’t give details on all the deaths, but said two women and a man who worked for the Health Ministry were swept away by a flooded canal in the central municipali­ty of Juigalpa.

The government closed schools nationwide.

Costa Rica’s President Luis Guillermo Solis blamed two deaths in that country on the storm. Flooding drove 5,000 residents into emergency shelters.

In Louisiana, officials ordered the evacuation of part of coastal St. Bernard Parish east of New Orleans ahead of the storm. Earlier Thursday, a voluntary evacuation was called in the barrier island town of Grand Isle south of New Orleans.

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